Dodgers Suitor Steven Cohen Has Been Through His Own Bitter Divorce

Hedge fund billionaire Steven Cohen, who is bidding for the L.A. Dodgers, has at least one thing in common with Frank McCourt: Both have been through an ugly divorce.

Cohen divorced his first wife, Patricia, more than 20 years ago. But the two have been locked in a bitter struggle ever since, according to this 2010 New York magazine story. Patricia has accused him of insider trading and hiding assets during their divorce proceedings. (Her lawsuit was thrown out in March.) Cohen is quoted as describing her as "a terrorist on a mission to make my life a living hell."

For years, Steve liked to sit at the head of a large table, a video camera broadcasting his every move and comment to his traders, each of the master's gestures important.

Of course, it's not easy being an Orwellian dictator, and Patricia says he would bring the stress home with him: "He could be demanding, hypercritical, and a screamer; if he had a bad day, he'd explode." But he's mellowed with age:

The market no longer beats him up emotionally--he can even lose $100 million of his personal money, as he did one day not long ago, and shake it off.

That's not something Frank McCourt could say. But if you're excited that Mr. Moneybags is going to load up the Dodgers with star contracts, be warned: Cohen hates to be asked for money.

For Steve, generosity is a complicated impulse. He likes to keep control... His daughter, a film student at the time, was warned not to buy movies if they could be rented... [A] letter states, "Mr. Cohen has previously requested and wishes to reiterate that requests should not come directly to him from the children."

On the positive side, it sounds like Cohen makes sports a priority in his life. He now lives with his second wife, Alex, in a 32,000 square foot mansion in Greenwich, Conn., which includes extravagant sports facilities:

Steve lives like a comfy king with his queen in a lavish compound with a fully loaded sports complex: hockey rink and basketball court, swimming pool, and, on the grounds, a two-hole golf course and a home for Alex's parents. "I don't need a house this big, but you know what? Why not?" Alex told The Wall Street Journal.

Sounds like they'll fit right in here.

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